In a dramatic atmosphere of crisis, the National Parliament of Papua New Guinea voted on July 13, 1999, to replace Sir Bill Skate as prime minister. Almost the whole of the government defected to Sir Mekere Morauta when Skate’s bold last-minute attempt to obtain badly needed overseas funds from the government of Taiwan—in reward for Papua New Guinea’s diplomatic recognition—was rejected by most political parties. Two months later, on the 24th anniversary of independence, Morauta lamented the way in which Papua New Guinea had fallen short of the mark. He noted that the country had all the resources necessary to become prosperous but the people had not fulfilled their destiny, and things in 1999 were worse than they had been in the early days of independence. The prime minister outlined his priorities for turning the nation around, saying that he was determined to continue with the search for a resolution with the secessionist movement on Bougainville Island, repair the broken economy, stop the disastrous decline of the kina, rebuild the institutions of the state, and restore the integrity of the political system. His solution was to target the Australian government, the International Monetary Fund, and the World Bank for economic assistance while at the same time tackling what he described as the lethal mix of corruption and incompetence at home.